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Medicaid (and CHIP) 101

Medicaid (and CHIP) 101. Joan Alker Tricia Brooks Martha Heberlein CCF Annual Conference Washington DC July 30, 2013. Thanks to Medicaid and CHIP, we have made unprecedented p rogress in c overing children.

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Medicaid (and CHIP) 101

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  1. Medicaid(and CHIP) 101 Joan Alker Tricia Brooks Martha Heberlein CCF Annual Conference Washington DC July 30, 2013

  2. Thanks to Medicaid and CHIP, we have made unprecedented progress in covering children.

  3. Even as poverty rates have increased, the rate of uninsured children has declined.

  4. What’s the view from 30,000 feet?

  5. Medicaid: Basic Background • Enacted in 1965 as companion legislation to Medicare • Originally focused on the welfare population: • Single parents with dependent children • Aged, blind, disabled • Guarantees entitlement to individuals and federal financing to states • Includes mandatory services and gives states options for broader coverage

  6. Medicaid: Federal-State Partnership

  7. CHIP: Basic Background • Enacted in 1997 to encourage states to expand coverage for children; reauthorized in 2009 through 2013 (CHIPRA) • States can use funds to expand Medicaid or cover children in a separate program • States have more discretion regarding eligibility and benefits if they establish a separate program • Block grant with capped annual allotments • No entitlement to coverage and children must be uninsured

  8. CHIP: Federal-State Partnership

  9. How are Medicaid and CHIP financed?

  10. MedicaidFinancing • The federal government matches state Medicaid spending on an open-ended basis • The current matching rate ranges from 50% to 73%, based on a state’s per capita income • Newly eligible under health reform qualify for higher match, starting at 100% in 2014-16 and phasing down to 90% in 2020 and beyond

  11. PerformanceBonus Federal bonus money is available for states through 2013 that significantly increase enrollment of already-eligible uninsured children in Medicaid and implement at least 5 out of 8 “enrollment and retention provisions.” SOURCE: Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, “CHIPRA Performance Bonuses: A History, 2009-2012” (December 2012).

  12. CHIPFinancing • The federal government pays for 65% to 81% of each state’s CHIP program (depending on the state) • Block grant with capped annual allotments, although states facing funding shortfalls can tap the child enrollment contingency fund • ACA extended CHIP funding through FY2015 and increases each state’s matching rate by 23 percentage points starting in FY2016

  13. CHIPAllotments, in millions

  14. Where does eligibility standtoday?

  15. Mandatory Minimum and 2013 Median Medicaid/CHIP Eligibility Thresholds Minimum Medicaid Eligibility under Health Reform - 138% FPL ($25,975 for a family of 3 in 2013) SOURCE: Based on the results of a national survey conducted by the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured and the Georgetown University Center for Children and Families, 2013. The parent minimum is tied to each state’s 1996 AFDC levels; some states may have higher mandatory minimums for pregnant women. 15

  16. Children's Eligibility for Medicaid/CHIP By Income, January 2013 ME VT WA NH MT ND MN OR MA NY WI SD ID MI RI CT WY PA NJ IA NE OH DE IN IL NV MD CO UT WV DC VA CA KS MO KY NC TN AZ (CHIP closed) SC OK AR NM GA AL MS LA TX AK FL < 200% FPL (4 states) HI 200-249% FPL (22 states) 250% or higher FPL (25 states, including DC) SOURCE: Based on the results of a national survey conducted by the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured and the Georgetown University Center for Children and Families, 2013. 16

  17. Medicaid/CHIP Eligibility for Pregnant Women By Income, January 2013 ME VT WA NH MT ND MN OR MA NY WI SD ID MI RI CT WY PA NJ IA NE OH DE IN IL NV MD CO UT WV DC VA CA KS MO KY NC TN AZ SC OK AR NM GA AL MS AK LA TX FL 133% - 184% FPL (12 states) HI 185% FPL (16 states) >185% FPL (23 states, including DC) SOURCE: Based on the results of a national survey conducted by the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured and the Georgetown University Center for Children and Families, 2013. 17

  18. Medicaid Eligibility for Working Parents By Income, January 2013 ME VT WA NH MT ND MN OR MA NY WI SD ID MI RI CT WY PA NJ IA NE OH DE IN IL NV MD CO UT WV DC VA CA KS MO KY NC TN AZ SC OK AR NM GA AL MS LA TX AK FL HI < 50% FPL (16 states) 50% - 99% FPL (17states) 100% FPL or Greater (18 states, including DC) SOURCE: Based on the results of a national survey conducted by the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured and the Georgetown University Center for Children and Families, 2013. 18

  19. CoverageofLawfully-ResidingImmigrantsJanuary 2013 WA NH VT MT ME ND OR MN MA MA ID WI SD NY RI WY MI RI CT IA PA NV NE NJ OH IL UT IN DE CO CA WV KS VA MD MO KY NC DC TN AZ OK NM AR SC MS AL GA TX LA AK FL HI Children Only (6 states) Pregnant Women Only (1 state) Both Children & Pregnant Women (18 states, including DC) NOTE: includes states that have adopted ICHIA in Medicaid, CHIP, or both programs. SOURCE: Based on the results of a national survey conducted by the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured and the Georgetown University Center for Children and Families, 2013. 19

  20. Eligibility Impacts of the ACA • States are required to “hold steady” on existing eligibility and procedures for adults until 2014 and for children until 2019 • New national Medicaid eligibility level of 133% FPL for adults is now “optional” following Supreme Court ruling • Eliminates “stair-step eligibility” moving those ages 6-18 with income between 100-133% FPL from separate CHIP programs to Medicaid 20

  21. MAGI-based Eligibility • Modified Adjusted Gross Income • Not a number, it’s a methodology, for determining income eligibility • Who’s counted in the family and whose income counts • Rooted in tax law • Generally consistent with premium tax credits in the Exchange (exceptions) • No income disregards or deductions • Flat 5 percentage points above 133% FPL 21

  22. Other Direct Impacts on Children and Families • Prohibits the use of asset tests or face-to-face interviews • Limits CHIP waiting periods to 90 days and requires certain exceptions • Requires parents to enroll uninsured children before enrolling themselves • Creates a “welcome mat” effect that will bring currently eligible people 22

  23. A Closer Look at Benefits and Cost-Sharing

  24. Benefits • Medicaid • Comprehensive services through EPSDT • CHIP • Medicaid expansion – Medicaid benefit package • Separate program - based on Benchmark plan that is closer to private coverage

  25. How do states deliver care? • Fee-for-service (FFS) – state contracts directly with providers and directly pays them for services • Managed care organizations (MCO) – state contracts with a managed care company to “manage the delivery of health care” (similar to employers) • Must be voluntary without a waiver • Offer choice of plans or provider • Some benefits may be carved out (i.e. mental health and offered under FFS) • Premium assistance –using Medicaid and CHIP funds to purchase private insurance that is cost-effective and comparable • Provide benefit and cost-sharing wraps to achieve comparability

  26. Premiums and Cost Sharing State flexibility within limits - • Premiums limited below 150% FPL • None in Medicaid • Maximum of $19/enrollee in CHIP, depending on income/family size • Total cost-sharing cannot exceed five percent of family income • Cannot favor higher-income families over lower-income families • No cost sharing for well-baby and well-child care, including immunizations.

  27. Median Monthly Premiums, by Income, Among States with Premiums in Medicaid and CHIP, January 2013 Will not be allowed when Medicaid covers all children under 133% FPL Total Requiring Payment Number of States Charging Premiums 18 10 7 17 27 SOURCE: Based on the results of a national survey conducted by the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured and the Georgetown University Center for Children and Families, 2013. 27

  28. Consequences of Non-Payment of Premiums • 30-day grace period before coverage can be canceled for non-payment • Must be reviewed for lower or no premium • Cannot be “locked out” of coverage for more than 90 days • Cannot be required to pay back premiums before re-enrolling • Can be required to reapply

  29. States with Co-Payments for Selected Services for Children at 201% FPL, January 2013 SOURCE: Based on the results of a national survey conducted by the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured and the Georgetown University Center for Children and Families, 2013. 29

  30. Diving into a few administrative details

  31. What’s a SPA? • States submit their Medicaid or CHIP “State Plans” to CMS for federal approval • Details eligibility, policy options, procedures and other operating information • To make a change, the state submits a “State Plan Amendment” or SPA • Templates may be offered by CMS for states to fill out to enact specific policy options

  32. What’s a Waiver? • Section 1115 Waivers provide flexibility to design and improve state programsin order to “demonstrate and evaluate policy approaches” • Expand eligibility to individuals not otherwise eligible • Provide services not covered • Improve care, increase efficiency or reduce costs • New public process and transparency rules

  33. What do we know about uninsured children?

  34. Children are much less likely to be uninsured than adults. 34

  35. 31 states have lower uninsured rates for children than the national average. WA NH VT MT ME ND OR MN MA ID WI SD NY WY MI RI CT IA PA NV NE NJ OH IL UT IN DE CO CA WV KS VA MD MO KY NC DC TN AZ OK NM AR SC MS AL GA TX LA AK FL HI No statistically significant difference from the national average (5 states) Uninsured rate lower than national rate (31 states, including DC) Uninsured rate higher than national rate (15 states) 35

  36. Medicaid/CHIP: Primary Coverage Source for Low-Income Children 36

  37. However, coverage disparities persist between racial and ethnic groups. Hispanic children account for an astonishing 40 percent of the nation’s uninsured children, despite being only 24 percent of the child population. 37

  38. And the rate of uninsurance increases with age. SOURCE: J. Kenny, Urban Institute: “Uninsured Children: Who Are They and Where Do They Live?” 38

  39. Participation has risen but 70% of uninsured children are eligible but not enrolled.

  40. Enrollment – June 2011 SOURCE: Compiled by Health Management Associates from state enrollment reports and state officials for the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured (2012).

  41. How do we reach uninsured children?

  42. It takes a village… Common elements of success in states leading the way • State leadership • Bipartisan support • Culture change in agencies • Community-based partners

  43. And a multi-pronged approach. Getting the word out and assisting families through the process Removing red tape barriers to enrollment and renewal Extending the welcome mat through eligibility expansions, both broad and targeted

  44. What do we know about Outreach? • Use messages that are welcoming and easy to understand • Provide a reference (families earning up to $64,000 per year may qualify) • Target specific populations (adolescents, children of color) • Engage trusted messengers (doctors, real people who look like me) • Be persistent: hardest to reach families require significant follow-up

  45. Minimal Outreach Requirements before CHIP Medicaid CHIP State CHIP plan must describe procedures to inform families of the availability of coverage programs and to assist them in enrolling Rules give examples of outreach strategies: education and awareness campaigns (including targeted mailings) enrollment simplification application assistance through community-based organizations • Provide places for people to apply other than government offices by out-stationing eligibility workers (or alternative plan) • Conduct outreach on EPSDT after Medicaid enrollment

  46. Number of States with Selected Outreach and Enrollment Assistance Resources in Medicaid and/or CHIP January 2013 SOURCE: Based on preliminary results from a national survey conducted by the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured and the Georgetown University Center for Children and Families, 2013. 46

  47. ACA sets new expectations for outreach and consumer assistance. Medicaid & CHIP Agencies Exchanges Conduct outreach and public education Operate a call center Maintain a robust web site Create a navigator program Must have a certified application counselor program • Conduct outreach • Use plain language in program information • Provide enrollment assistance • Vulnerable and underserved populations • Online, in-person, phone • May have certified application counselors

  48. The ACA offers many options for assistance. • Internal and out-stationed eligibility staff • Exchange call center staff • Navigators • In-Person Assisters in some states • Certified Application Counselors • Brokers and agents in the Exchange

  49. How do we cut red tape and remove paperwork barriers to coverage?

  50. Policy and Procedures Proven to Promote Enrollment • Simplified forms • Reduced paper documentation • No asset tests and in-person interviews • Electronic verification of eligibility • Multiple entry points (online, paper, over the phone) • Presumptive eligibility • Express lane eligibility 50

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